OC Bar Owners Nearly Stabbed

OCEAN CITY — A Connecticut man was charged with first-degree assault this week after pulling a knife and nearly stabbing a resort bar owner during a scuffle.
Around 1:40 a.m. on Monday, Ocean City Police was dispatched to the Sandbar Karaoke Lounge on 33rd Street for a reported fight in progress. When the officer arrived, she observed three men, including bar owner Eric Thompson and two employees, holding down a third man, later identified as Justin J. Parlow, 22, of Derby, Conn.
One of the employees pointed to some nearby bushes and told the officer “the knife is in there,” according to police reports. The officer interviewed Thompson, who told police just before their arrival, Parlow had been involved in a physical altercation with other patrons outside the bar. Thompson told police when he went outside to break up the fight, Parlow “bear hugged” him and tackled him.
The victim said at one point when he was trying to wrestle away from Parlow on the ground, the suspect pulled out a folding knife, opened the blade and pushed it toward his left thigh. The victim told police he could feel the blade touch his thigh after Parlow pulled it out and pushed it toward him. Thompson told police he thought Parlow was going to stab him.
Thompson said at that point, bouncer Tyler Lundy intervened. Lundy told police Parlow and his girlfriend had gotten into an argument with another couple outside the bar and that Parlow’s girlfriend had assaulted the male half of the other couple. Lundy said at that point, Thompson came out to break up the fight and Parlow wrestled him to the ground. The bouncer said as Thompson was trying to push Parlow off him, the suspect pulled out the knife and pushed it toward Thompson’s thigh.
Lundy said he and other bar patrons jumped on Parlow and he was eventually able to kick the knife from the suspect’s hand and then threw it in the bushes out of Parlow’s reach.
Parlow was arrested and charged with first-degree assault, second-degree assault and openly carrying a dangerous weapon with intent to injure. He was taken before a District Court Commissioner and was later released on a $25,000 bond.

Knife Pulled After Being Turned Away

OCEAN CITY — A Pennsylvania man was arrested and charged with first-degree assault last weekend after allegedly pulling a knife and threatening a downtown bar co-owner who refused to allow him to enter the establishment near closing time.
Shortly before 2 a.m. on Sunday, Ocean City Police officers on bike patrol responded to the area of the party block on 17th Street for a report of an individual displaying a knife. When the officers arrived, they observed a man, later identified as Tyler N. Cole, 21, of Natrona Heights, Pa., walking away from the area and were informed by bar staff Cole was the suspect who had pulled out the knife and threatened bar co-owner Ralph DeAngelus. The officers detained Cole and when they asked him if he had any weapons on him, he reportedly responded, “I have a knife but I wasn’t trying to harm anybody.”
The officers then interviewed DeAngelus, who told police he refused to allow Cole to enter the nightclub because he appeared to be highly intoxicated. According to police reports, after Cole was denied entry, he became extremely agitated and verbally abusive.
DeAngelus told police Cole then started speaking in a language he did not understand. According to the witness statement, Cole then bent down on one knee and pulled out a knife. DeAngelus told police Cole flipped open the knife blade and, “looked as though he was going to charge me,” according to police reports. DeAngelus told police he believed Cole was looking for an opportunity to stab him or another doorman.
Cole told police, “I pulled the knife out to cut a string off of my shirt.”
The arresting officer noted in his report Cole was under the influence of drugs and/or alcohol and that he was sweating profusely. The OCPD officers reviewed security system footage provided by the nightclub, which corroborated the victim’s account of the incident.
According to the police report, the incident occurred around 2 a.m. during a time when there was a large crowd leaving the establishment at closing time. The report indicates Cole opened the knife blade and displayed it as if he intended to use it and his actions “created a substantial risk of serious injury or death to the individuals around him.”
The knife was recovered from Cole’s right front pocket during the incident. He was charged with first-degree assault, attempted second-degree assault and reckless endangerment. He was later released after posting a $10,000 bond.

Featured Stories

SALISBURY – The Community Foundation of the Eastern Shore raised more than $88,000 during its second annual “Shore Gives More” campaign. The foundation’s online campaign allowed individuals to find charities from Worcester, Wicomico and Somerset counties and give them the opportunity to donate on one site. “The Community Foundation serves a diverse audience of organizations,”… Read more »

OCEAN CITY — New regulations prohibiting bow-riding on vessels could be in place as soon as next spring after a productive meeting last week between the area’s representatives in Annapolis and state boating officials. In the wake of several serious boating accidents in the resort last summer, including a fatal propeller strike that claimed the… Read more »

OCEAN CITY — Roughly nine miles off the coast of Ocean City, a quiet memorial and final resting place of a beloved long-time resort local, who passed a year ago this month, is now symbolically teeming with life as part of growing artificial reef site. Tony Meredith, known reverently and affectionately as “Uncle Tony” by… Read more »

OCEAN CITY — Calling a potential designation of the offshore Baltimore Canyon as the nation’s first Urban National Marine Sanctuary potentially “devastating” to the multi-million dollar fishing industry, resort officials this week agreed to send a letter of opposition to state and federal representatives. In October, National Aquarium officials announced they were seeking an Urban… Read more »